“I looked up and saw branches flying. I then saw it go through the field after crossing the street. It sounded like an earthquake hit. Someone in the shop yelled, ‘Take cover! It’s hitting.’”

The damaging tornado, described as being several blocks wide, also swept onto the vast Walmart Superstore parking lot as it bore down on the department store, sending anything loose in its path skyward before moving eastward.

Especially hard-hit was a residential cul de sac, Tiburon Court, where one home’s roof was lifted up by the tornado and sent pieces scattered into the sky. Other homes received severe damage and some had their natural gas pipelines severed by the onslaught.

Commercial buildings lining Bethel were damaged by the freak funnel, which was described by Chad Norman, who works at Farmer George’s Meats, as being at least 600 yards wide with a defined tornado outline that veered across the busy roadway in the eastern part of the city.

An unidentified woman driving on Bethel Avenue had her vehicle lifted up and smashed to the pavement by a tornado that crossed the roadway just after 2 p.m. in Port Orchard. The woman was slightly injured. (Bob Smith / Kitsap Daily News)

An unidentified woman driving a Toyota sedan was slightly injured when her car was lifted by the tornado from Bethel in front of the meat market and spun around to its side. The vehicle suffered extensive damage. The woman, Norman said, was able to get out of her car and was assisted by onlookers, who wiped blood from her face.

Additional reports of injuries were not immediately available, although emergency crews later reported they had not encountered any significant injury cases.

The tornado sent tree branches flying across a three-block area and tore off fencing at the neighboring Bethel Saloon. Washington State Patrol troopers cordoned off the area with caution tape and warned onlookers of reports of natural gas leaks in the area.

The roof of a home near Rhapsody Drive was lifted by the twister, as shown by helicopter video on KOMO-TV.

“It was really wide at the top and looked like a waterspout,” Norman said.

(Video by Aurora Day)

A citywide response from units of the Port Orchard Police, South Kitsap Fire and Rescue and Washington State Patrol arrived at the scene to cordon off the roadway to traffic — an area ranging from the intersection of Bethel and Lund avenues to Southeast Blueberry Road.

Kirby Cook, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, told the Seattle Times that while thunderstorms are in the weather forecast for the area, the tornadic activity caught them by surprise. Tornado events are fairly rare in the Pacific Northwest, and if they do occur, they are fairly weak and shortlived.

“We were not expecting any to be severe. Certainly this one was,” Cook said.

Skip Olmsted, who lives on Southeast Serenade Way, navigates his way around downed branches on his property after a tornado struck a portion of Port Orchard. Robert Zollna / Independent

Resident Skip Olmsted, who lives at 2095 SE Serenade Way, said he was taking a shower when he noticed something odd happening to the water supply.

“I thought that the water tank was going out,” Olmsted said. “Then I saw shadows from things going by from the small window and figured something was going on.”

The resident, whose home incurred severe damage, said he called his wife and told her about the tornado strike.

“I thought she was going to have a heart attack when I called her. It was bad enough then. I don’t know what she’s going to think when she sees this.”

The tornado reportedly dissipated after causing destruction among the homes behind the large department store.

Kitsap County work crews closed Harris Road Southeast between Southeast Lund Avenue and Southeast Salmonberry Road due to the tornado’s damage. Salmonberry, between Branson Drive Southeast and Harris, has restricted access to the area.